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FEEDING WILDLIFE BEN220

Duration (approx) 100 hours
Qualification
Statement of Attainment

 

Learn to Manage Wildlife Feeding

 

Wild animals have varied diets.

Anyone who cares for wildlife whether in captivity or not, needs to understand the way they acquire and incorporate nutrition into their bodies, and what is important to ensure their feeding is optimising their overall health and wellbeing.

This course has been developed as a training program for training in contexts such as:

  • Zoos and Wildlife Parks
  • Animal Rescue Centres
  • Veterinary Clinics
  • Conservation Projects

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Course Content

This course contains 8 lessons as follows:

1. Wildlife, Energy & Feed Foundations

Energy flow in Nature
Feeding Ecology (the Natural Food Web)
Types of feeders (eg. herbivore, Omnivore etc)
Major Natural Habitats
Feeding Behaviour Characteristics
Specific Feeding Behaviours
Replicating Natural Feeding Behaviours
Nutritional Ecology
Simulated Feeding
Goals & Benefits of Simulated Feeding
Simulated Feeding Applications
Welfare in Captive Care
Assessing Animal Welfare
Duty of Care
Captive Care, Feeding & Animal Health
Responsibilities of Handlers, Trainers, Managers, Researchers, Veterinarians
Regulatory Frameworks
Animal Feeding Terms & Definitions -Feed, Diet, Ration, Palatability, Digestibility, Concentrates, Basal Feeds, Supplements, etc

2. Macronutrients

Food Groups
Monosaccharides
Disaccharides
Trisaccharides
Polysaccharides
Carbohydrates as an Energy Source
Carbohydrate Classification
Lipids (Fats)
Lipid Digestion
Sources of Lipids
Protein
Biological Value of Protein
Protein Content of Foods
Function of Protein
Protein Sources
Water
Variations in Water Required for Different Animals
Factors affecting Water Intake

3. Micronutrients

Role of Micronutrients
Deficiencies and Toxicities
Minerals
Calcium – sources, deficiencies, toxicities
Phosphorus – sources, effects, deficiencies, toxicities
Magnesium - deficiencies, toxicities
Sodium and Chloride
Potassium 
Sulphur
Trace Elements– Iron, Manganese, Copper, Iodine, Cobalt, Zinc, Selenium
Vitamins- including toxicities and deficiencies
Vitamin A
Vitamin D
Vitamin E
Vitamin K
Vitamin B Complex
Vitamin C

4. Evaluating Feed & Digestibility

Digestibility in Diet Planning
Analysing Feedstuffs
Minerals 
Crude Protein
Fats & Oils
Fibre
Soluble Carbohydrate
Maize Composition as a Food Example
Calculating Digestibility – true energy value of a diet
Determining Total Digestible Nutrients (TND)
Digestible Crude Protein (DCP)
Evaluating Feeds
Protein Value of Different Feed Components
Feeding Matrix – by Species /Group
Case Study – Grey Wolf Dietary Requirements and Age

5. Understanding Forage & Foraging Behaviour

Introduction and Forage Types
Types of Forage Land
Types of Foragers
Different Digestive Systems = Different Feeds
Avian, Monogastric, Ruminant, etc 
Ways to feed Fodder
Different Fodder Ecosystems
Grassland
Heathland
Moorland
Mechair -Dune Pasture
Maquis – Forest Pasture
Rangeland
Savanna
Steppe
Wood Pasture
Veld
Grasses, Legumes, Roots, Wildflowers
Forbs
Forbs and Mineral Nutrition

6. Managing Diets for Mammals

Different Energy Requirements for Different Animals
Water in the diet
Safe Practices
Order Primates – Macronutrients & Micronutrients
Primate Diets – Folivorous, Faunivorous, Insectivorous, Omnivorous, Frugivorous
Physiological Adaptations for Different Diets
Order Carnivora – Canid Diets
Canids – Carbohydrate & Protein Sources
Raw Food Diet Risks
Order Felines
Feline Protein Sources
Dietary Variations in Wild Cats
Case Study – Variations in Puma Dietary Requirements 

7. Managing Diets for Other Mammals

(More details Coming)

8. Managing Diets for Birds and Reptiles

(More details coming)

Course Aims

  • Explain key concepts and terminology in wildlife and nutritional ecology and describe natural feeding behaviours with strategies for replicating them in captive environments.
  • Examine carbohydrates, proteins, fats, water, and assess how they provide energy and support growth, production and maintenance.
  • Examine vitamins and minerals in animal feed, and assess how they regulate metabolism, immunity, reproduction, and health.
  • Examine the criteria and methods used to evaluate feeds and feed digestibility.
  • Explain how to manage food supply for foraging animals
  • Explain how to manage food supply for Mammals
  • Explain how to manage food supply for Birds, Reptiles, Amphibians and other animals
  • Determine a feeding program for a species of wildlife.
Courses can be started anytime from anywhere in the world!